Grand Island Hotel Corp. v. Second Island Development Co.

214 N.W.2d 253, 191 Neb. 98, 1974 Neb. LEXIS 812
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1974
Docket39084
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 214 N.W.2d 253 (Grand Island Hotel Corp. v. Second Island Development Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grand Island Hotel Corp. v. Second Island Development Co., 214 N.W.2d 253, 191 Neb. 98, 1974 Neb. LEXIS 812 (Neb. 1974).

Opinion

McCown, J.

This is an action by plaintiff, Grand Island Hotel Corporation, against the defendants, Boss Hotels Company and Second Island Development Company, to recover the cost of acquiring the outstanding leasehold interest of a prior lessee of a portion of the premises identified as the Yancey Hotel in Grand Island, Nebraska. Plaintiff’s cause of action is based upon breach of covenants under a lease and a warranty deed. The District Court dismissed plaintiff’s causes of action against both defendants. Plaintiff has appealed and defendant, Boss Hotels Company, has cross-appealed.

Most of the facts are stipulated. The defendant, Boss Hotels Company, for some years owned the property in Grand Island, Nebraska, commonly referred to as the Yancey Hotel. Boss sold the hotel property to the de *100 fendant, Second Island Development Company, and on June 30, 1968, executed a warranty deed to the property naming Second Island as grantee. The deed contained standard covenants under which Boss, as grantor, covenanted “with the grantee and with grantee’s heirs and assigns, that grantor is lawfully seised of said premises; that they are free from encumbrance (except two designated mortgages); that grantor has good right and lawful authority to convey the same; and that grantor warrants and will defend the title to said premises agáinst the lawful claims of all persons whosoever.”

The plaintiff, Grand Island Corporation, commenced operation of the Yancey Hotel on July 1, 1968, under an arrangement with Second Island Development Company and Boss did not operate the hotel for any purpose after July 1, 1968.,

On April 30, 1969, Second Island, as lessor, executed a written lease with Grand Island, as lessee, covering the entire Yancey Hotel property. The lease agreement provided that it was retroactive to the 1st day of July 1968, and the lease was for a term of 25 years ending June 30, 1993.

Second Island, as grantor, “demised.and leased” the real estate described. The habendum clause covered the buildings and improvements and “the rights, privileges and appurtenances thereunto belonging or appertaining * * The lease agreement contained no specific covenant or warranty of quiet enjoyment by the lessor. It did contain a provision that “Lessee has examined the demised premises and agrees that no statement, representation, or promise with reference to the demised premises has been made that is not contained in this instrument.”

In December 1961, while it was the owner and operator of the Yancey Hotel, the defendant, Boss Hotels Company, as lessor, had executed a written lease with *101 Mrs. Vera Coons, as lessee, covering some space in the Yancey Hotel. The leased portion was on the street floor level of the Yancey Hotel building and Mrs. Coons owned and operated a beauty shop on these premises. She continued to own and operate the beauty shop and was in possession of the premises at all times relevant here. Mrs. Coons’ lease with Boss commenced on January 1, 1962, and was for a period of 10 years. . The lease was not recorded in the office of the register of deeds of Hall County.

The Coons lease was prepared by Boss. It was on á form containing 31 printed paragraphs, and some typed additions. Three of the printed paragraphs and a portion of a fourth had been deleted by lining through the printed language. Paragraph No. 12 was one of these. It provided: “In the event of the sale of said property, or if possession thereof shall be required for the purpose of more permanently improving, altering or remodeling the building on said premises or any part thereof, or if possession shall be required so as to enable lessor to lease said premises for a term of more than five years or in case said premises shall be condemned for public purposes, then lessee agrees to vacate and surrender possession of said premises within thirty (30) days after notice in writing to quit.”

Vera Coons’ attorney testified that the deletions had been recommended by him previously, and that the deletions were on both copies of the lease at the time Mrs. Coons signed it. The officer of Boss Hotels who signed two copies of the lease in Des Moines, Iowa, testified that he did not make the deletions and that they were.not made in his presence. Mrs. Coons’ copy of the lease was introduced in evidence. Boss did not produce any other copy. The secretary of Boss Hotels Company testified that he was unable to find its copy of the lease or anything pertaining to it.

Prior to May 1, 1969, although Mrs. Coons was in *102 possession, neither the plaintiff nor the defendant, Second Island, had actual knowledge of the lease from Boss to Vera Coons. Plaintiff did not make any inquiries of Vera Coons as to the conditions of her occupancy prior to April 30, 1969. After plaintiff discovered the written lease, Vera Coons refused to move her beauty shop on demand based upon her written lease agreement with Boss. Plaintiff was kept out of possession until an agreement was reached between Vera Coons and the plaintiff to move the beauty shop to a new location in the basement of the hotel in the summer of 1969. After the lease to Vera Coons was discovered by defendant Second Island and the plaintiff, demand was made by them on the defendant, Boss Hotels Company, to pay the cost of purchasing the lease and defendant Boss refused. Thereafter, plaintiff expended a total sum of $6,998.40 to remodel space in the basement of the hotel and to move Vera Coons and relocate her business. It is stipulated that the cost was fair and reasonable and that because remodeling and renovation of the hotel had begun, substantially greater expense would have been required to permit the beauty shop to remain in its former location. It was also stipulated that in the event of a judgment in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant Boss, the amount should be $6,998.40.

A jury was waived and the case was tried to the court. The District Court found that the lease agreement between defendant Boss Hotels Company and Vera Coons contained no recordable legal description; was not acknowledged and was not recorded or recordable; and was void as to defendant Second Island Development Company. The court also found that plaintiff was on notice that Vera Coons was in possession of a portion of the premises under some claim of right; that notwithstanding this fact, plaintiff accepted a lease agreement which contains no provisions as to tenants *103 in possession and provides no recourse for plaintiff. Based on those findings, the court found the plaintiff had no cause of action against the defendants or either of them and dismissed the action against both.

A critical foundation issue here is whether or not the lease of the beauty shop premises to Mrs. Coons was a valid subsisting 10-year lease and therefore paramount to the interests of both plaintiff and Second Island, and also whether or not the deleted lease provision authorizing its termination on 30-days written notice was effective. The District Court made no specific finding as to the validity or provisions of this lease as between the parties to it, but found only that it had not been recorded and was not recordable because of a lack of recordable legal description and an acknowledgement, and for those reasons found it void as to Second Island.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
214 N.W.2d 253, 191 Neb. 98, 1974 Neb. LEXIS 812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grand-island-hotel-corp-v-second-island-development-co-neb-1974.